ACDC News – Issue 06-14

Here come rural stereotypes – by parachute journalism.

Recently we added to the ACDC collection a commentary about “parachute journalism.” This practice involves dispatching globe-trotting reporters and camera crews to cover the latest breaking news. Commentator Marjie Lundstrom examined the “damage wrought by regional stereotypes” and included instances of press crew forays into rural areas.

One example cited evidence of stereotyped coverage of political campaigning in the Iowa caucuses. “Iowa ‘s urban dwellers may wield the political clout in this state, but what readers and viewers generally get is a steady diet of cornfields, barns and hogs.”

Title: Parachute journalism
Posted at: http://www.poynter.org/content/content_print.asp?id=4682&custom
 


Mass media helping to build peace in times of rural conflict.

A recent addition to the ACDC collection featured examples of the humanitarian role of mass media in conflict. One case study involved a conflict between crop growers and herders in a region of Mali. A drought prompted herders to drive their animals across growers’ fields before crops had been harvested. Radio Duwanza staff members analyzed this conflict, then initiated a campaign that helped ease it. They:

  • Aired public service announcements reminding listeners of their traditional collaboration and advised restraint.
  • Reported incidents promptly to help keep conflicts from mushrooming.
  • Encouraged crop growers to use radio to inform listeners when the growers would be finished harvesting particular fields.

“What emerges here is the importance of the radio journalist’s local knowledge,” observed author Gordon Adams. “A key to a successful media intervention in conflict is understanding the complexities of the situation.” Such guidelines and potentials in occasions of conflict would seem relevant in any region or news medium.

Title: The humanitarian role of mass media in conflict
Posted at: http://webzone.k3.mah.se/projects/gt2/viewarticle.aspx?articleID=13&issueID=3


The U.S. Extension Service’s “gendered vision of modern agriculture.” 

A thought-provoking analysis in Women’s Studies focused on “a cultural battle waged in the 1930s and 1940s over the future of rural America and its women folk.” On one level, researcher Margot Canaday analyzed the development, impact and demise of a rural women’s radio program, “We Say What We Think.” On another level, she examined a much broader issue.

“The Extension Service promoted the development of a mechanized, scientific, and capital-intensive agriculture,” she reported. However, it “faced an obstacle in the interdependent rural community, because farmers who were connected to their neighbors were unlikely to adopt the capital-intensive practices that inevitably pushed some farmers off the land. For modern agriculture to take hold, the ties that bound rural communities had to be severed.” From this perspective, she observed, women’s organizational skills made rural communities strong and threatened the Extension agenda for change in the countryside.

“In response, the Extension Service promoted domesticity to isolate women within the home, discourage women’s community-based political involvement, and thereby weaken the overall structure of the rural community. … Further, the discipline of Rural Sociology, a key ally for rural communities, was marginalized or co-opted within the academy.”

Title: We say what we think


They all learn the same … don’t they? 

Not really, according to Mandi McLeod after analyzing the preferred learning styles of dairy farmers in New Zealand {NZ}.

“NZ dairy farmers can be segmented on the basis of their different learning style preferences and gender and/or position in the industry.”

Title: They all learn the same
Posted at: http://www.aiaee.org/2006/Accepted/414.pdf


Thoughts about embedding agricultural journalists.

We appreciate these thoughts in response to the recent article in ACDC News, “Embed journalists everywhere”:

“That, in my opinion, was the power of agricultural journalism in supporting the spread of science and technology in farming in the mid-20th century. Most of us had been embedded in the farming culture since birth. One difference might be that we were embedded in the culture rather than coming in embedded in the ‘occupying troops.’ But that was back then.”
Bob Kern, emeritus faculty member, Iowa State University

“There’s the concept of embedding. To me the concept implies ‘in bed with’ and the risk implies journalists are too close to the spheres {to use your term} they’re covering. On the potential side, embedding also produces striking reports of some touching examples of the Iraqi war, such as those dealing with hospital treatment of amputees and severe wounds. It brought tears to my eyes.”
Gary Reynolds, former editor, Prairie Farmer

 


Tempered excitement about ICTs in rural development.

The following headline of a 2005 article in the Journal of the Community Development Society catches your eye: “Do information communication technologies {ICTs} promote rural economic development?” You read the experiences of five U.S. rural communities that deployed ICT programs, then a wrap-up by researchers Kenneth E. Pigg and Laura D. Crank:

“… there is little evidence that telecommunications leads to economic growth or that businesses in the communities are using ICTs extensively.” Instead, “… the physical deployment of the hardware is not sufficient to achieve success.”

Title: Do information communication technologies promote rural economic development?


Communicator activities approaching

September 13-16, 2006
Annual conference of the Association of Food Journalists in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Information: http://www.afjonline.com

September 14-17, 2006
Annual conference of the Canadian Farm Writers’ Federation in Winnipeg, Canada.
Information: http://www.cfwf.ca

October 1, 2006
Deadline for research or professional papers to be submitted to the Agricultural Communications section of the Southern Association of Agricultural Scientists, which meets February 3-7, 2007, in Mobile, Alabama.
Information {E-mail}: contact@mail.ag-communicators.org

October 8-11, 2006
“Delivering information for the new life sciences.” Conference of the U.S. Agricultural Information Network (USAIN) at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Information: http://usain.mannlib.cornell.edu

October 12-13, 2006
“Newspapers and community-building.” Twelfth annual symposium co-sponsored by the Huck Boyd National Center for Community Media and the National Newspaper Association Foundation in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
Information: http://huckboyd.jmc.ksu.edu/symposium/papers.html

October 25-27, 2006
World Congress on Communication for Development in Rome, Italy. Organized by the Development Communication Division, World Bank; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations; and The Communication Initiative.
Information: http://www.devcomm-congress.org/worldbank/macro/2.asp


I like pigs.

Closing with this classic rural insight from Winston Churchill, we nod in sure agreement and remember pigs we have liked:

“I like pigs.
Dogs look up to us.
Cats look down on us.
Pigs treat us as equals.”


Best regards and good searching.

Let us know when you identify interesting items you cannot find, locally or online. Reach us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest (or send) agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy {sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801} or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

August, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-13

Pursuing a global view of agricultural communicating.

You might like to know that June proved to be a decidedly “international” month in the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. ACDC staff members added documents that involve agriculture-related communicating in more than 40 countries throughout the world.


Pay-off from visual aids on avian flu.

A case report in The Lancet revealed interesting communication experiences of a public health veterinarian during the 2004 avian flu outbreak in Laos. While discussing this threat with veterinary officials and administrators of a provincial hospital, visiting veterinarian Clara J. Witt observed:

“People were very polite, but did not seem that interested until I showed them … pictures of affected chickens. This use of visual aids paid off. … Pictures allowed them to appreciate that H5N1 could, and did, affect them.”

Title: Experience of the spring 2004 avian influenza outbreak in Laos


Nervous about it.

Results of a national survey during late April among U.S. residents reflected signs of nervousness about avian flu. Sixty-one percent of those surveyed in an Associated Press poll by Ipsos Public Affairs considered it somewhat or very likely that bird flu will spread to birds in the United States in the next 12 months. Also:

•  One-third (34 percent) said they were somewhat or very concerned that they, or someone in their immediate family, might catch the bird flu.
•  More than half (53 percent) said they believed they were somewhat or very likely to die from bird flu if they got it.
•  More than one-half (52 percent) said they were not confident in the federal government’s ability to handle an outbreak of bird flu among humans in the United States.

Title: AP/Ipsos Poll: shaky confidence
Posted at: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20060421-0841-birdflu-appoll.html


Myths, principles and practices of health risk communicating. 

A concise, 26-page primer on health risk communication came out recently from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Prepared by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, the report features these major sections:

  • Role and importance of community involvement;
  • Overview of issues and guiding principles for health risk communication;
  • Presenting information at public meetings;
  • Working with the media; and
  • References.

Title: A primer on health risk communication
Posted at: http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/HEC/primer.html


Research papers from the 2006 ACE conference.

We are pleased to help announce nine new agricultural communication research papers. They were presented at the international conference of the Association for Communication Excellence in Agriculture, Natural Resources and Life and Human Sciences (ACE). Members of the Research Special Interest Group presented them June 2 in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. Check with the contact persons if you are interested in copies or details.

“Cognitive and affective response by Lubbock Chamber of Commerce affiliates to agricultural news.” Meredith Campbell, Chad S. Davis, Cindy Akers, David Doerfert and Steve Fraze, Texas Tech University. Contact: meredith.campbell@ttu.edu.

“Golden rice: Promise or peril? The view from Philippine farmers.” Shalom Mula, Iowa State University. Contact: shalom@iastate.edu.

“Initial exploration of the Texas print newspaper media’s utilization patterns of an agricultural media resource guide.” Jessica Hein, Cindy Akers, David L. Doerfert and Chad S. Davis, Texas Tech University.
Contact: cindy.akers@ttu.edu.

“Organizational gatekeeper or peacekeeper: The agenda-building efforts of agricultural communication professionals.” Amanda M. Ruth, College of Charleston
Contact: rutha@cofc.edu.

“Are we listening? Assessing the potential of extension to utilize mass media to convey consumer-oriented home horticulture information to non-traditional audiences.” Tracy Irani, Courtney Meyers and Erin Eckhardt, University of Florida
Contact: irani@ufl.edu.

“Agriculture and entertainment media: A qualitative study of the impact of entertainment media on perceptions of agriculture.” Lisa K. Lundy, Louisiana State University, and Amanda M. Ruth, College of Charleston. Contact: llundy@lsu.edu.

“Application of the elaboration likelihood model to the design of genetically modified food labels.” Courtney A. Meyers, University of Florida, and Jefferson D. Miller, University of Arkansas.
Contact: cameyers@ifas.ufl.edu.

“Building public trust: extension messages communicated during the 2004 Florida hurricane season.” Melissa Muegge, Ricky Telg, Tracy Irani, Mark Kistler and Nick Place, University of Florida.
Contact: mmuegge@allflexusa.com.

“Framing in print: news coverage of three poultry meat recalls.” Sarah Heuer and Jefferson D. Miller, University of Arkansas.
Contact: sheuer@uark.edu.

Abstracts of these and six alternative research papers are posted at: www.aceweb.org/sigs/research/resources/ace2006abstracts.pdf.


How rural children use ICT – a surprise for parents and teachers.

A study reported in the Journal of Rural Studies revealed some surprises about how rural children in a United Kingdom community use information and communication technologies (ICT). For example:

•  Adults (notably parents and teachers) involved in the study reflected an “adultist, macro and future oriented vision” of ICT for children. They envisioned ICT as having the potential to enable rural children to overcome their spatial isolation and “extend their knowledge terrain beyond the boundaries of the place where they live.”

•  However, researchers found that youngsters (ages 11-16) in the study used these technologies in more “everyday and mundane ways.” They enjoyed using the Web to access information about celebrities, sports and fashion. They used online forms of communicating to focus “on the nitty-gritty social relations and activities of everyday life.”

Title: A window on the wider world?


Grateful to the government market news reporters.

Rob Murphy of Informa Economics, Inc., expressed thanks early this year to public-supported market news reporters in the U.S. Department of Agriculture {USDA}. He applauded their efforts in covering livestock and meat markets and making data available to users. Speaking at the USDA Agricultural Outlook Forum, Murphy described how private market analysts use such reports to help clients make short- and long-term decisions. He described specific applications such as price forecasting, benchmarking, volume analysis and demand analysis.

Title: How private market analysts use market news
Posted at: http://www.usda.gov/oce/forum/2006%20Speeches/PDF%20speech%20docs/Murphy2806.pdf


Signs of need for better writing skills.

Findings reported recently in the Journal of Agricultural Education pointed to a substantial need for greater writing competencies among graduate students in agricultural education.

Researchers found that “93 percent of graduate students in this sample were unable to demonstrate complete proficiency in writing.” Sixty percent of the students had “inadequate” writing skills. Only 41 percent demonstrated “adequate writing ability.”

Title: Authenticated writing competencies of agricultural education graduate students


Lively ways of saying things.

Our review of documents for the ACDC collection exposes us to some lively ways of expressing ideas. Here is a recent example that caught our eye:

“…a toothless, truncated document, scattered with beautiful words.” Describing the outcome of an international meeting on plant genetic resources. See page 5 at http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=196

Please let us know when you see (or discover your own) creative, lively ways of saying things about agriculture, food, fiber, natural resources and rural matters in general.


Best regards and good searching.

Also, get in touch with us when you identify interesting items you cannot find, locally or online. Reach us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest {or send} agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy {sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801} or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

July, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-12

Color me spoiled.

A news report we have added to the ACDC collection describes new food labels that change color to signal the freshness of packaged meat in the local supermarket. Food Quality Sensor International Inc. is reported to be testing these labels in California and Nebraska. On average, they add a penny to the packaging costs for each dollar of meat sold.

Title: Food label would bypass sniff test


Advertising in rural India 

Is the title of a book reviewed in a 2002 issue of the Language journal. We do not have this book as yet, but we have entered a book review by Edwin Battistella. He concluded that the book would interest readers “who are curious about how communication and language work in the marketplace and how marketing affects linguistic and social structure.”

“It is likely there is a book to be written about language and rural advertising in the United States as well,” Battistella observed. We suspect the idea could also apply usefully to many countries.

Title: Advertising in rural India


Development journalism – an oxymoron.

“Developing countries need good journalism and good journalists, period,” according to the communications director of the International Development Research Centre. Jean-Marc Fleury argued in a report we added recently:

“Development, after all, is not something thrust upon people, but a process in which people engage, in which they are both actors and beneficiaries. For people to act effectively, they must be informed. And that is the role of media and journalists in both developed and developing worlds. This, however, is not what some are calling ‘development journalism.'”

Fleury called for: (a) better training of journalists for this challenge and (b) greater effort to make the results of developing country research better known around the world. We in the Center share the goal of helping address both those needs.

Title: Development journalism or just good journalism 
Posted at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/trust/2015/story/2004/06/printable/040609_jean_marc_fleury.shtml


Embed journalists everywhere.

“Embed them where people live, work, play, and pray,” Aly Colón argued in Poynteronline. “Embed them in neighborhoods, urban areas, rural areas, corporations, nonprofits, hospitals, families, retirement communities, conservative centers and liberal lodges.” What does the author think might happen?

•  It would reframe the way journalists gather information and tell their stories.
•  Journalists would gain more intimate knowledge by focusing on the personal, ordinary, everyday experiences of those they observe.
•  They would craft stories in which persons portrayed would recognize themselves and the situations depicted.

Could it be said that specialized reporters, such as agricultural journalists, already are embedded in the spheres they cover? Could they use that concept more fully? What risks and potentials are involved?

Title: Embed journalists everywhere 
Posted at: http://www.poynter.org/content/content_print.asp?id=25265


Communications and the three faces of science fraud. 

One can see the role of communications in three “faces of science fraud” described by David Schubert of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. His commentary in the San Diego Union-Tribune examined the creation or manipulation of data to achieve specific ends related to biotechnology and other scientific endeavors. The three faces he identified:

  • Increasing pressure on politicians and regulatory agencies to reduce regulatory requirements.
  • Companies employing their own scientists to publish manuscripts in an attempt to discredit the consensus of scientists and feed public relations campaigns.
  • Regulatory agencies such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration “forced to bend the facts of science to fit the political agenda” of the day.

Title: Three faces of science fraud 
Posted at: http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20060216/news_lz1e16schuber.html


The Internet – “a weapon on the table” for “biotech war.”

“Either you pick it up or your competitor does, but somebody is going to get killed,” according to an agri-marketing source cited in a 2002 Guardian Unlimited (UK) commentary. George Monbiot described successful efforts by Monsanto to position biotechnology more positively on the Internet.

Title: Covert biotech war 
Posted at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,842999,00.html


Yes, we are still searching off the beaten paths.

The wide-ranging sources of information about agriculture-related communicating continue to surprise, impress and challenge us. For example, here are a few off-the-main-path journals where we found such literature during recent weeks:

Clinical Pediatrics
Health Libraries Review
American Ethnologist
Federal Communications Law Journal
Women’s Studies
Management Quarterly
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
Action Research
Language


Communicator activities approaching

July 23-26, 2006
“Meet us at the Summit.” Agricultural Media Summit, a joint meeting of American Agricultural Editors’ Association (AAEA), Livestock Publications Council (LPC), ABM Agri-Council, Agricultural Communicators of Tomorrow (ACT) and Agricultural Relations Council (ARC) in Portland, Oregon.
Information: http://www.agmediasummit.com

August 12-16, 2006
“Feed your Senses.” Fiftieth Anniversary Congress of the International Federation of Agricultural Journalists (IFAJ) in Hamar, Norway.
Information: http://www.ifaj2006.com

August 24-26, 2006
49th Annual Conference of the National Market News Association in Chicago, Illinois.
Information: http://www.ams.usda.gov/nmna

September 13-16, 2006
Annual conference of the Association of Food Journalists in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Information: http://www.afjonline.com

September 14-17, 2006
Annual conference of the Canadian Farm Writers’ Federation in Winnipeg, Canada.
Information: http://www.cfwf.ca


A panda’s punctuation lesson.

We close this issue of ACDC News with a punctuation lesson, a tip of the hat to grammarians among us. It comes from the newsletter of the European Federation for Information Technology in Agriculture, Food and the Environment (EFITA).

A panda enters a restaurant. He orders a chef salad and eats it. Then he gets a gun from his bag, shoots all the lights out and leaves the place dark. He gets arrested and during his trial the judge asks the obvious question: “Why did you do this?” The panda presents a dictionary and shows this explanation of his kind: “Big mammal living in Southern China. Eats, shoots and leaves.”

This little tale echoes a recent book – Eats, Shoots and Leaves – by Lynne Truss. It emphasizes the importance of punctuation.


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest [or send] agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy [sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801] or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

July, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-11

New education partnership to benefit IFAJ members. 

We are most pleased to announce a new pilot project that involves the International Federation of Agricultural Journalists (IFAJ) and the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center (ACDC). Plans for this partnership have taken form during the past year.

Several new efforts are designed to expand professional development opportunities and resources for IFAJ members. They began during May:

  • Center staff members are providing news and how-to features for issues of IFAJ E-News and the professional development section of the IFAJ Web site.
  • New IFAJ pages on the Center Web site offer tips for finding information that is especially useful to agricultural journalists.
  • IFAJ is forming an ad-hoc advisory committee to strengthen the Center by helping identify useful agricultural journalism literature being generated throughout the world.

Special thanks to David Markey, President; Owen Roberts, Vice President for Professional Development and Education; and other members of the IFAJ Executive for helping envision and initiate this pilot effort. At the Center, Joe Zumalt, Jim Evans and others are assembling and providing information to serve IFAJ members.

IFAJ web site: www.ifaj.org


Rural small businesses not benefiting fully from broadband services.

A speaker at the 2006 Agriculture Outlook Conference, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, cited evidence of this gap. Stephen B. Pociask of TeleNomic Research concluded that, “compared to their urban counterparts, rural small businesses are not seeing the benefits resulting from the investment and use of broadband services.” He also presented evidence that consumers in rural areas have fewer choices among broadband providers, “confirming the existence of a rural digital divide.”

Title: Broadband use by rural small businesses 
Posted at: http://www.usda.gov/oce/forum/2006%20Speeches/PDF%20speech%20docs/Pociask2706.pdf


The cell phone — “real bridge across the digital divide.” 

We have added to the ACDC collection an article from OneWorld South Asia about benefits that cell phones can offer rural residents in that region. Author Swaminathan A. Aiyar suggested, “I believe that the cell phone, not the computer, will be the real bridge across the digital divide.” His reasons? It does not require continuous power. It costs a “tiny fraction” of what computers cost. It provides access to the Internet. And the cost of calls “has crashed.”

Aiyar cited results of a research project in which Kerala fishermen used cell phones to reduce volatility of fish prices, eliminate wasted catch, and increase their incomes as well as the incomes of merchants with whom they traded. Consumers benefited through reduced prices as the waste ended.

Title: Cellphones bridge the digital divide 
Posted at: http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/128332/1/


Frank discussions with Wal-Mart. 

Thanks to the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues for reporting on a session involving Wal-Mart executives at the 2005 convention of the National Newspaper Association [NNA] in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Here are some of the concerns expressed by small-town newspaper representatives at the session:

  • The company buys relatively little newspaper advertising.
  • It puts out of business the local firms that formed the retail and advertising bases of small communities.
  • It replaces retailers who supported youth, educational, civic and church programs. “We don’t see that coming back from Wal-Mart to our communities.”

About 2,500 newspapers, mostly weeklies, make up the NNA membership. A 2005 survey of members “found that 87 percent had a Wal-Mart in their coverage area, and 67 percent said the presence of the company had a negative impact on their paper.”

Title: Small-town newspaper folks have frank discussions 
Posted at: http://www.uky.edu/CommInfoStudies/irjci/nnawal-mart.htm


An early online agricultural information service. 

Would you believe it existed 94 years ago? We have added to the ACDC collection a Hartford Courant article of February 1912, entitled “The ‘Phone in the Farmhouse.” This article described a circular published by the British post office and addressed to farmers. It pointed out that if at least five subscribers living on or near a country road leading to a town with a telephone exchange would agree to use one line, “they can telephone as much as they please to people on that exchange.” The circular emphasized these advantages to the farmer:

  • Latest market information for best advantage in the sale of produce and stock;
  • Weather reports and forecasts;
  • Arrangements with the railway station for delivery of goods;
  • Telegrams sent without going or sending to the post office;
  • Accelerated cooperative sale movements among farmers; and
  • Fewer long and expensive journeys.

The cost? £3 [$14.60] a year.

Title: The ‘phone in the farmhouse


Environmental journalism meets development journalism.

Two streams of journalism are coming together and have much to learn from each other, according to Guy Gough Berger of Rhodes University in South Africa. His 13-page report in Intermedia examined the roots of these two streams, the styles of each and ways they can enrich each other.

“The point argued in this article is that the convergence of environmentalism and developmentalism underlines a beneficial exchange of media traditions and insights. Going further, it also gives weight to the importance of reporting environmental stories as being simultaneously development ones, and to development stories as having environmental significance.”

Title: All change: environmental journalism meets development 
Posted at: http://www.iicom.org/intermedia/Dec02/berger.html


Communicator activities approaching

July 17-18, 2006
“Ready, Set, Plan.” Crisis response workshop in Kansas City, Missouri. For organization administrators, communicators and others interested in executing functional risk and crisis responses. Sponsored by USDA-CSREES, Extension Disaster Education Network, K-State Research and Extension, and National Center of Food Protection and Defense.
Information: http://www.communications.ksu.edu/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=706

July 23-26, 2006
“Meet us at the Summit.” Agricultural Media Summit, a joint meeting of American Agricultural Editors’ Association [AAEA], Livestock Publications Council [LPC], ABM Agri-Council, Agricultural Communicators of Tomorrow [ACT], and Agricultural Relations Council [ARC] in Portland, Oregon.
Information: http://www.agmediasummit.com

August 12-16, 2006
“Feed your Senses.” Fiftieth Anniversary Congress of the International Federation of Agricultural Journalists (IFAJ) in Hamar, Norway.
Information: http://www.ifaj2006.com

October 25-27, 2006
World Congress on Communication for Development in Rome, Italy. Organized by the Development Communication Division, World Bank; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations; and The Communication Initiative.
Information: http://www.devcomm-congress.org/worldbank/macro/2.asp


Concerns about sheep advertising. 

The advertising industry of the Netherlands is turning sheepish, according to a New York Times report by Doreen Carvajal. It seems an online reservations company is displaying its corporate logo on blankets worn by sheep along highways. Company sales and Web site visits have increased, according to the report. However, at least one town is fining the company “because advertising on livestock violates its ban on advertising along highways.”
Title: Baa code the sheep of things to come? 
Posted at: http://www.theage.com.au/news/world/baa-code-the-sheep-of-things-to-come/2006/04/24/1145861285790.html#


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest [or send] agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy [sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801] or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

June, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-10

Making connections when animal disease crises hit. 

A recent exercise simulating an outbreak of foot and mouth disease in Ontario, Canada, revealed “a lot of tactical issues to address.” According to a news report we have added to the ACDC collection, this fictitious outbreak took place in real time between December 11 and 14. It began at a dairy farm, then spread to veal operations located elsewhere. Results suggested:

  • Producer groups knew their members and could communicate with them effectively.
  • However, “non supply-managed groups do not have organizations which represent all members of their industry and have little legislated authority in a crisis.”

A call for coordinated communications was among the recommendations offered.

Title: Are our farms ready for major outbreak?
Posted at: http://archives.foodsafetynetwork.ca/animalnet/2006/4-2006/animalnet_april_9.htm


“Good communication is as important as good science.” 

That perspective came from a public health practice work group of the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. A 19-page report offered specific strategies for risk communicating. The strategies involved hazards of pesticide misapplications and seem appropriate, as well, for other kinds of risk to human health and well-being.

Title: Health education and risk communication strategies
Posted at: http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/hec/mpan2.html


Welcome to development journalists in Nepal. 

We are pleased to send issues of ACDC News to members of the Forum of Development Journalists (FODEJ), a network of development journalists in Nepal. These journalists from print and broadcast media formed about four years ago, according to President Arjun Bhattarai.

“We feel serious need for one strong and registered alliance for development and investigation reporting to uplift Nepali people towards poverty alleviation. … We believe media can play a strategic role. …”

ACDC has a substantial body of information about journalism and communications, as related to agricultural and rural development. We look forward to helping support the efforts of FODEJ.

Contact: fodejnepal@gmail.com
Related title: Development journalism greater priority needed


Americans worried most about water pollution. 

When it comes to environmental issues facing the United States in 2006, Americans express the greatest concern about issues related to water pollution. A Gallup Poll conducted during mid-March revealed that a majority said they worry a great deal about pollution of drinking water (54 percent), contamination of soil and water by toxic waste (52 percent), and pollution of rivers, lakes and reservoirs (51 percent). These concerns obviously hold implications for farmers, ranchers and others in the food complex.

Title: Water pollution tops environmental concerns
Available online to Gallup Poll on Demand subscribers at: http://poll.gallup.com/content/default.aspx?ci=22492&pg=1


Connecting Japanese food producers and consumers through civic journalism. 

Writing in Japan Media Review, Kate Parry said her visit to Japan revealed “extraordinary examples of civic journalism already under way in Japan.” This style of journalism involves media both in covering news and encouraging civic engagement.

Agriculture-related civic journalism appeared among the examples Parry cited. Investigation by a newspaper, The Kahoku Shimpo, revealed widespread use of unregistered chemicals, even on “organic” farms. The paper established an online “Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Research Lab” as a virtual think tank to tackle the problem in a way that included the voices of producers and consumers.

“The idea of connecting producers and consumers through civic journalism has become a standard approach to agriculture coverage in the Tohoku farming region.”

Title: Civic journalism gains momentum
Posted at: http://ojr.org/japan/media/1077241122.php


Why cities care about the future of rural governance.

James Hunt, president of the National League of Cities, offered reasons such as these during the 2006 Agricultural Outlook Forum sponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture:

  • There is no longer a homogeneous definition of rural.
  • There are many new faces in rural America. Seven out of 10 rural counties are dominated by manufacturing, health care, education, retail or other employment not related to farming.
  • In the new economy, many different types of governing bodies oversee needs in rural communities.

“To truly be the new face of Rural America, we must set turf battles aside,” Hunt urged, “and create new ways of reaching decisions that allow all the various leaders to make decisions quickly and efficiently for the sake of their communities.”

Title: Why cities care about the future of rural governance
Posted at: http://www.usda.gov/oce/forum/2006%20Speeches/PDF%20speech%20docs/Hunt228.pdf


Communicator activities approaching

June 13, 2006
“Getting the word out. Are we communicating effectively?” A food safety communicators conference hosted by the Food Safety Network at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Information: http://www.foodsafetynetwork.ca/en/article-details.php?a=3&c=32&sc=419&id=874

June 17-20, 2006
“Brewing success.” 2006 Institute of the Cooperative Communicators Association (CCA) in Portland, Oregon.
Information: http://www.communicators.coop

June 19-23, 2006
“Networking communication research.” Conference of the International Communication Association (ICA) in Dresden, Germany.
Information: http://www.icahdq.org/events/conference/2006/conf2006_program.asp

July 17-18, 2006
“Ready, Set, Plan.” Crisis response workshop in Kansas City, Missouri. For organization administrators, communicators and others interested in executing functional risk and crisis responses. Sponsored by USDA-CSREES, Extension Disaster Education Network, K-State Research and Extension, and National Center of Food Protection and Defense.
Information: http://www.communications.ksu.edu/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=706

August 12-16, 2006
“Feed your senses.” Fiftieth anniversary Congress of the International Federation of Agricultural Journalists (IFAJ) in Hamar, Norway.
Information: www.ifaj2006.com


Do corn plants cry for help? 

Talking plants have seldom fit our mental image of agricultural communicating. However, we have added to the ACDC collection an ear-opening example. Researchers at the Max Planck Society in Germany have “identified a gene which produces a chemical ‘cry for help’ that attracts beneficial insects to damaged plants.” It seems corn plants, when attacked by certain pests, emit a “cocktail of scents” to attract parasitic wasps that lay eggs on the pests. Offspring of the wasps then feed on the caterpillars and relieve the corn plants.

Title: Corn cries for help when attacked
Posted at: http://archives.foodsafetynetwork.ca/agnet/2006/1-2006/agnet_jan_17.htm#story0


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest (or send) agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy (sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801) or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

June, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-09

Effects of a rural newspaper revolution. 

Media South Asia has published a two-part series about the impacts of recent efforts by some newspapers in India to generate more local news through district editions.

“By increasing distribution centres, using an improved road network to reach newspapers further into the hinterland by early morning, and hiring stringers to send news from very local centres for separate district pages, publishers are making an aggressive push to increase their circulation.”

You can learn from these reports about the techniques used and impacts observed among rural families and communities.

Title: Does the rural newspaper revolution promote development? Part I
Posted at: http://www.thehoot.org/story.asp?storyid=Web210214207141Hoot94627%20PM1365&pn=1&section=S13#

Title: Does the rural newspaper revolution promote development? Part II
Posted at:
http://www.thehoot.org/story.asp?storyid=Web61952349Hoot41830%20PM1375&pn=1&section=S13


New communication initiatives in peri-urban agriculture. 

Thanks to Harsoyo Oedijono, an agricultural communications faculty member at Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia, for alerting us to recent networking initiatives involving peri-urban agriculture. Connections between urban and rural sectors of all nations call for more attention. The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) and other development agencies are taking active steps to address nutritional, health, environmental and other urgent issues at the rural-urban interface of societies. According to CGIAR, “Urban agriculture is far more than farms or gardens in an urban environment. Urban agriculture includes livestock raising, water management, and organic waste management.”
For example: http://www.cipotato.org/urbanharvest/home/about_ua.htm

An information network, Peri Urban Development in South East Asia (PUDSEA), was established in 2001 to involve several Asian and European universities in such an effort.
Information: http://www.pudsea.net

Effective communication will be a key to the success of such endeavors and we wish to actively scout for information to address that challenge. Can you help? Please call our attention to documents about the communication aspects of urban and peri-urban agriculture.


Water music: a multimedia environmental message. 

A creative approach to public education about protecting the Earth’s waters has taken shape through the efforts of art and magazine photographer Marjorie Ryerson and associates. Her book, Water Music, features 100 of her water photos, accompanied by “the writings and musical contributions of 66 world renowned musicians, who have creatively responded to the meaning and value of water in their lives.”

All net royalties go to the Water Music Fund of the United Nations Foundation. In addition, a larger Water Music Project – involving concerts, lectures, educational programs and other events – will add revenue to the Fund.

For consideration: What new and creative multimedia approaches to public education might highlight important dimensions of food and agriculture?

Title: Water music
Posted at: http://www.water-music.org


How consumers view the globalization of food.

We have added to the ACDC collection a Journal of Food Distribution Research article featuring results of two U.S. consumer surveys, one in South Carolina and one nationwide. Questions covered aspects such as:

  • What words consumers associate with “globalization”
  • How globalization has affected their personal lives and communities
  • Their comparative views about seven attributes of domestic and imported foods
  • Foods for which they are willing to pay more, in terms of production practices and location of production
  • Safety of various kinds of food
  • Their opinions about genetically modified crops and foods
  • Trustworthiness of nine sources of information about the safety of food

Title: The globalization of food
Posted at: http://agecon.lib.umn.edu/cgi-bin/pdf_view.pl?paperid=17261&ftype=.pdf


Topics seldom addressed in the U.S. farm press? 

Al Tompkins, columnist for Poyteronline, (published by the Poynter Institute) has addressed several of such topics during the past year or so. Here are three of his columns we added recently to the ACDC collection:

Title: Rural areas still pay highest price in Iraq war
Posted at: http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=85646

Title: Farmers and suicide
Posted at: http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=73331

Title: Fraud on the farm
Posted at: http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=92354


Bookings close May 31 for this year’s 50th anniversary congress of the International Federation of Agricultural Journalists (IFAJ).

It takes place in Norway during August 12-16, using the theme “Feed Your Senses.” The congress will be held at Hamar, one of Norway ‘s most versatile farming regions, a short drive from picturesque mountain ranges and valleys. The program includes briefing sessions on agricultural and trade issues; excursions looking at dairying, pig production, culture and food, forestry, science/biotech and horticulture; and professional development seminars. Both pre- and post- congress tour packages are also available. For more information and to register, visit www.ifaj2006.com.


Communicator activities approaching

June 2-6, 2006
“Excellence en communications.” International conference of the Association for Communication Excellence in Agriculture, Natural Resources, and Life and Human Sciences (ACE), in Quebec, Ontario, Canada.
Information: http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/ace2006/

June 13, 2006
“Getting the word out. Are we communicating effectively?” A food safety communicators conference hosted by the Food Safety Network at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Information:
http://www.foodsafetynetwork.ca/en/article-details.php?a=3&c=32&sc=419&id=874

June 17-20, 2006
“Brewing success.” 2006 Institute of the Cooperative Communicators Association (CCA) in Portland, Oregon.
Information: http://www.communicators.coop

June 19-23, 2006
“Networking communication research.” Conference of the International Communication Association (ICA) in Dresden, Germany.
Information: http://www.icahdq.org/events/conference/2006/conf2006_program.asp


An egg poem.

We close this issue of ACDC News with a poem contributed to Farm Journal magazine by “A. L. B.” in 1914. You may notice how little the egg prices to producers have increased during these past 92 years.

The eggs my hens do lay each day
Are as a heap of coins to me;
I count them every one apart,
My treasury, my treasury.

Each egg four cents – four cents in cash –
To fill a purse long since wrung dry;
I count each egg within each nest
And pray the price keep high.

O pullets dear that cluck and lay!
O fat old hens with yellow legs!
I stroke your plumes, barred, white and gray,
And sell your eggs, dear hens –
And sell your eggs.

Title: An egg poem


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest (or send) agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy (sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801) or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

May, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-08

Food challenge for 2006: satisfying the ethical consumer.

“Ethical considerations increasingly dictate food purchases, and companies that pay scant attention to this defining trend will lose out,” according to a recent report in Food Production Daily. It explained that consumers are deciding how to spend their money based on factors such as:

  • Impacts food companies are having on the environment.
  • How companies “source” their products.
  • How they treat their workers.
  • How they label their products.

Citing examples of adjustments by several multinational food marketers, the report observed that some “are beginning to realize that tapping into ethical consumerism makes good business sense.”

Title: Food challenge for 2006
Posted at: http://www.foodproductiondaily.com/news/printNewsBis.asp?id=64868


Trust, bias and fairness of information sources for biotechnology issues.

Researchers Gary J. Wingenbach and Tracy A. Rutherford recently examined this issue among 50 Texas journalists and 40 U.S. agricultural journalists representing newspapers and television media. In considering nine types of information sources, respondents ranked university scientists/researchers and newspapers most trustworthy, unbiased and fair in communicating about agricultural biotechnology issues. Respondents ranked television media and activist groups least trustworthy, unbiased and fair in covering such issues. This article in AgBioForum also reported on agricultural journalists’ attitudes about public involvement in scientific decision processes.

Title: Trust, bias and fairness of information sources
Posted at: http://www.agbioforum.org/v8n4/v8n4a03-wingenbach.htm


U.S. public’s top priority for homeland security? 

Protection against 9/11 style incidents is on the minds of U.S. residents, but not at the top of their list. Instead, they assign highest priority to (a) protecting the nation’s food supply from deliberate contamination and (b) preventing the release of chemical or biological agents. These findings came from a national survey of 4,260 U.S. adults during August 2005. The National Center for Food Protection and Defense funded the study.

“On average, respondents would allocate 13.3 percent more [funds] to protect the food supply chain and 12 percent more to protect against release of a toxic chemical or biological agent than they would to protect against another terrorist attack using hijacked aircraft.”

Title: Food supply seen as vulnerable
News report posted at: http://www.mndaily.com/articles/2006/03/23/67660?print

Research report posted at:
http://agecon.lib.umn.edu/cgi-bin/pdf_view.pl?paperid=20453&ftype=.pdf


Producers consider precision farming tools cost-effective.

“The benefits of adopting precision agriculture technologies exceed the costs required to use such systems,” according to a 2003 survey of Ohio farmers. More than half consider their overall precision farming system useful enough to justify the costs.

Types of tools considered most beneficial? Respondents pointed to (a) variable rate application of lime, phosphorus and potassium, (b) geo-referencing soil sampling and (c) satellite field photography.

Title: Survey shows precision ag tools worth investment
Posted at: http://www.agriculture.purdue.edu/aganswers/story.asp?storyid=3583


On communicating with mules. 

Our ears perked up when we saw a report recently from Rural Heritage about “communicating with your mule.” If this skill is on your agenda, you can get some useful tips. And they may spill over into communicating with other humans. Author Sophia Sarember suggested that communicating with a mule is like communicating with a person who speaks a language different from yours. For example:

“In the process of getting my Chinese-speaking friend to help me in my work, I learn a little Chinese and he will learn some English,” she explained. Her concluding remark in the article: “Your mule will be your best instructor if you take time to open a respectful dialogue.”

Title: Communicating with your mule
Posted at: http://www.ruralheritage.com/mule_paddock/mule_communication.htm


Words of caution to federal officials about bird flu communicating.

A recent report on National Public Radio featured suggestions from psychiatrist Jody Lanard, an international consultant on risk communications. She praised U.S. federal officials for sounding the alarm about pandemic flu, but said their message has been undercut at times by statements that are misleading, self-serving or wrong. Examples cited:

  • Comparing a pandemic with a forest fire. This image does capture the speed at which a pandemic can spread, she said, but it is “profoundly misleading to suggest that a flu pandemic can be snuffed out like a smoldering cigarette.”
  • Mixing true and false statements, such as: “When it comes to a pandemic, we are overdue and underprepared.”
  • Using true statements that can be misleading, such as: “We must stockpile vaccines and antiviral drugs and improve our ability to rapidly produce new vaccines …”
  • Implying a passive public with government as big parent. She emphasized, “Everything that’s known about the psychology of fear tells us that people can tolerate more fear if there is something for them to do.”

Title: Sifting through official speak on bird flu
Posted at: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyid=5071792


Communicator activities approaching

May 8-11, 2006
“NETC 2006.” National Extension Technology Conference in Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Information: http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/netc2006/

May 14-17, 2006
“International teamwork in agricultural and extension education.” Conference of the Association for International Agricultural Education and Extension (AIAEE) in Clearwater Beach, Florida, USA.
Information: http://www.aiaee.org/pdf/2006Announce.pdf

May 21-26, 2006
“Managing agricultural information for sustainable food security and improved livelihoods in Africa.” Conference of the International Association for Agricultural Information Professionals (IAALD) in Nairobi, Kenya.
Information: http://www.asareca.org/iaald-africa

June 13, 2006
“Getting the word out: are we communicating effectively?” A food safety communicators conference hosted by the Food Safety Network at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Information:
http://www.foodsafetynetwork.ca/en/article-details.php?a=3&c=32&sc=419&id=874

June 17-20, 2006
“Brewing success.” 2006 Institute of the Cooperative Communicators Association (CCA) in Portland, Oregon.
Information: http://www.communicators.coop


Another look at food oxymorons.

We close this issue of ACDC News with another round of contradictory or incongruous words from the dinner table. Examples:

White chocolate
Grape nuts
Plastic glasses
Jumbo shrimp
Fresh frozen
Non-fat ice cream

Have others caught your eye? If so, pass them along to us. Thanks.


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest (or send) agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy (sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801 ) or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

May, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-07

“I am a water journalist.” (Why not?)

“Unless water-related issues are debated and resolved, water wars are inevitable. Enter the water journalist,” reads the subhead of a report from Media South Asia. Author Shangon Das Gupta of Bangalore, India, identified levels at which water journalism can operate. Gupta also described several examples of it in action.

“Water journalism is a young concept and certainly an ambitious one. Yet it is an idea whose time has come. Unless there is an effort to create social literacy on the issue of water and equitable distribution of water through policy change, ‘water wars’ are inevitable.”

Title: Water journalism
Posted at: http://www.thehoot.org/story.asp?storyid=Web21021491123Hoot15944%20PM1701&pn=1&section=S13


Internet no replacement for traditional information sources for farmers.

A recent survey evaluating the utility of the Iowa State Agriculture Extension Web site to farmers led researcher K. Clausse to conclude:

“Clearly, in the case of Iowa farmers, the Internet has not replaced traditional communication sources. The findings of this study provide evidence that Extension remains a valuable service to farmers. However, in the performance of its functions, it does not have to abandon traditional communication sources to disseminate information. If Extension continues to push the idea of streamlining information by simply putting it on the Web, many farmers are going to be without the valuable agricultural information they are looking for and need.”

Title: The utility of Iowa State University
Posted at: http://list.msu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0602a&L=aejmc&T=0&F=&S=&P=4385


Advice for agricultural freelancers.

Steve Werblow recently offered five tips to readers of the American Agricultural Editors’ Association newsletter, ByLine, based on his 10 years of experience in freelancing. He urged freelancers to diversify, seek professional help, get insurance, plan for retirement and enjoy their work.

Title: You a freelancer


Muddled messages in agricultural biotechnology.

This was Gaffe #3 in a list of 9 identified in a recent Nature Biotechnology commentary entitled “Ten years of biotech gaffes.”

Commentator John Hodgson explained: “What I deal with here are the ‘bio-bloopers’ that mattered, the events that had, or still have, repercussions for the life science industry or for those who depend on it.” His description of muddled messages touched on “media distortion” and willingness of scientific journals to widely publicize results that may be contentious or equivocal. He urged journal reviewers and editors to ensure that peer-reviewed data are reliable.

Title: Ten years of biotech gaffes


Tips for good neighboring by livestock operators.

We have added to the ACDC collection a research report about perceptions among neighbors of livestock operators in Ontario, Canada. Researcher Wayne Caldwell observed that findings provide an “important framework for the agricultural industry to develop approaches to prevent and deal with community issues more effectively.” Here are some of the tips he offered for a good neighbor policy:

  • Prepare a communication plan that addresses concerns before building or expanding an operation.
  • Advise neighbors of field activity, such as spraying fields or spreading manure.
  • Hold Open Houses.
  • Provide employment in the community.
  • Have an open door policy toward neighbors.

Title: Positive perception of hog farms
Posted at: http://archives.foodsafetynetwork.ca/animalnet/2006/1-2006/animalnet_jan_23.htm#story4


Hitchhiker’s guide to rural telecom.

The ACDC collection also now contains a 16-page rural telecommunication glossary. It identifies and describes more than 100 terms – from ADSL [Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line] to Wireless Communication. The TeleCommons Development Group of Guelph, Ontario, Canada, created it in 1998 “to help you navigate the brave new world of information technologies for rural telecom.”

Title: The hitchhiker guide to rural telecom
Posted at: http://www.telecommons.com/uploaddocuments/telecommunicationsglossary5%2edoc


Continuing mixed reactions to food irradiation.

The new year seems to bring no new consensus about the desirability and future of irradiated foods. Here are two sample perspectives that have come to our attention:

Title: Broad failures signal weak future for irradiated foods
Posted at:
http://archives.foodsafetynetwork.ca/fsnet/2006/1-2006/fsnet_jan_23-2.htm#story4

Title: Food irradiation may start to take off
Posted at:
http://archives.foodsafetynetwork.ca/fsnet/2006/1-2006/fsnet_jan_9-2.htm#story0


Communicator activities approaching

April 19-21, 2006
“Jazzed!” Agri-Marketing Conference and Trade Show sponsored by the National Agri-Marketing Association (NAMA) in Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Information: http://www.nama.org/amc

May 8-11, 2006
“NETC 2006.” National Extension Technology Conference at Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Information: http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/netc2006/

May 14-17, 2006
“International teamwork in agricultural and extension education.” Conference of the Association for International Agricultural Education and Extension (AIAEE) in Clearwater Beach, Florida, USA.
Information: http://www.aiaee.org/pdf/2006Announce.pdf

May 21-26, 2006
“Managing agricultural information for sustainable food security and improved livelihoods in Africa.” Conference of the International Association for Agricultural Information Professionals (IAALD) in Nairobi, Kenya.
Information: http://www.asareca.org/iaald-africa

June 13, 2006
“Getting the word out. Are we communicating effectively?” A food safety communicators conference hosted by the Food Safety Network at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Information:
http://archives.foodsafetynetwork.ca/animalnet/2006/2-2006/animalnet_feb_2-2.htm


Advice to young journalists – on sucking eggs. 

We close this issue of ACDC News with a heads-up on 43 principles for young journalists. They come from Pranay Gupte, who was senior writer and global-affairs columnist for the Straits Times, Singapore, when he wrote them. You will note a rural ring in one:

“Don’t try and teach your grandmother how to suck eggs.”

Title: The Pranay Principles
Posted at: http://www.pranaygupte.com/articles/207/


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest (or send) agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy (sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801 ) or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu

April, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-06

From subservient chickens to brawny men.

That title of a research paper caught our eye recently. Speaking at the 2005 conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC), Lance Porter and Guy Golan compared “viral advertising” with television advertising.

“Off the Internet, ‘viral marketing’ has been referred to as ‘word-of-mouth,’ ‘creating a buzz,’ ‘leveraging the media,’ ‘network marketing,'” they explained. “But on the Internet, for better or worse, it’s called ‘viral marketing.'”

The researchers included among their case reports a “viral advertising” campaign by Burger King to sell a new BK TenderCrisp chicken sandwich via a Web site that featured the Subservient Chicken. Visitors to this site were “greeted by an actor dressed in a chicken suit and garter belt who appeared to respond to and attempt to act out any typed command. SubservientChicken.com attracted 14 million unique users in just under a year, and sales of the BK TenderCrisp reportedly increased 9 percent a week while the campaign was in full swing.”

Title: From subservient chickens to brawny men 
Posted: http://list.msu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0601e&L=aejmc&T=0&F=&S=&P=2744


ACDC collection now past 28,000.

We are pleased to report that the document collection in the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center passed the 28,000 mark during 2005. In fact, the Center now contains more than 28,500 documents as we scout globally for new (and not-new) information.

Thanks to all who are helping us identify this important, widely scattered literature and make it available to improve communications about what we grow and eat.


And more users than ever.

We also are encouraged to find that the ACDC Web site hosted more than one million successful page requests during 2005, an average of nearly 3,000 a day. This total for 2005 was nearly double the number of requests during 2004 and about 10 times the total of four years ago.


Global interests in communications about agriculture. 

Usage data indicate the Center Web site served users from 81 countries during 2005. Information searchers from 20 to 49 countries visited the site each month, averaging 35 countries a month.


We need to cover rural issues better. Readers will cringe. 

So reported Dee Davis, president of the Center for Rural Strategies, at a 2005 national conference for U.S. journalists. The Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues programmed this conference. Davis urged the press to pay attention to poverty, inadequate health care, substance abuse, suicide, community dysfunction and other tough rural issues in the U.S.

The press has a critical role to play, he said. “Not as advocates. No one who romanticizes journalism as much as I would want to change our job description. But we need to cover rural issues better. Misperceptions have consequences. We need to explain rural better. We need to show how it is connected to a bigger world. We need to talk about solutions from time to time. And we need more folks like you to show up and get some s___ on their shoes.”

Title: Misperceptions have consequences
Posted at: http://www.uky.edu/CommInfoStudies/IRJCI/deedavis.htm


FDA redefines meaning of ‘whole grain’ foods.

On Feb. 15, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) drafted new guidelines to help manufacturers better define “whole grain” content on food labels. By doing so, consumers can make heart-healthy choices based on a consistent definition of the term, the agency says.

The FDA says “whole grain” may include such foods as “barley, buckwheat, bulgur, corn, millet, rice, rye, oats, sorghum, wheat and wild rice.” However, the FDA does not consider “products derived from legumes (soybeans), oilseeds (sunflower seeds) and roots (arrowroot) as ‘whole grains.’” Furthermore, the FDA recommends that pizza only be labeled as “whole grain” or “whole wheat” when its crust is made entirely from whole grain or whole wheat flour, respectively.

“The food label is the best tool we have to help consumers choose a healthy diet, which includes whole grain products,” said Dr. Robert E. Brackett, director of the FDA Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. The FDA is accepting written comments on the draft guidelines for 60 days.

Title: FDA provides guidance on whole grain 
Posted at: http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/news/2006/NEW01317.html


Providing distance education for agriculture – 80 years ago.

We might do well to remember that agriculture was at the forefront of wireless distance education. If friends give you a doubtful eye at such news, you might refer them to this 1926 evidence from the U.S. Department of Agriculture:

Milton S. Eisenhower, “Agricultural Department plans augmented farm radio service: National School of the Air to open October 1 – courses include lectures on important phases of farming industry.”

Radio was an early – indeed, a magical – wireless information technology when it became available during the early 1920s. Check with us if you wish to gain access to this document or others about pioneering rural distance education by radio.

Title: Agricultural Department plans augmented farm radio service


Communicator activities approaching

April 19-21, 2006
“Jazzed!” Agri-Marketing Conference and Trade Show sponsored by the National Agri-Marketing Association (NAMA) in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
Information: http://www.nama.org/amc

May 8-11, 2006
“NETC 2006.” National Extension Technology Conference at Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Information: http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/netc2006/

May 14-17, 2006
“International teamwork in agricultural and extension education.” Conference of the Association for International Agricultural Education and Extension (AIAEE) in Clearwater Beach, Florida, USA.
Information: http://www.aiaee.org/pdf/2006Announce.pdf

May 21-26, 2006
“Managing agricultural information for sustainable food security and improved livelihoods in Africa.” Conference of the International Association for Agricultural Information Professionals (IAALD) in Nairobi, Kenya.
Information: http://www.asareca.org/iaald-africa

June 13, 2006
“Getting the word out. Are we communicating effectively?” A food safety communicator conference hosted by the Food Safety Network at the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
Information:
http://archives.foodsafetynetwork.ca/animalnet/2006/2-2006/animalnet_feb_2-2.htm


Agricultural communication faculty position available.

The Ohio State University seeks an assistant professor of agricultural communication (12-month, tenure or tenure-track). Responsibilities will include teaching undergraduate and graduate courses, advising students, conducting research, and other academic responsibilities. Review of applications begins May 1 and continues until the position is filled.

Information: Dr. M. Susie Whittington, Chair, Agricultural Communication Search Committee, Department of Human and Community Resource Development.
E-mail: Whittington.1@osu.edu


Pork packer’s advice on communicating.

We close this issue of ACDC News with a piece of advice on communicating from John Graham of George Horace Lorimer’s classic book, Letters from a Self-Made Merchant to his Son:

“It’s all right when you are calling on a girl or talking with friends after dinner to run a conversation like a Sunday-school excursion, with stops to pick flowers; but in the office your sentences should be the shortest distance between two periods.”


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest (or send) agricultural communication documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy (sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801) or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu.

March, 2006

 

ACDC News – Issue 06-05

“We are what we eat. So why can’t we get our recommended daily intake of agricultural news?” 

Karen Lewis asked that question in an article in the Ryerson Review of Journalism. She described how daily newspapers in Canada have eroded the farm beat in attempting to deal with a “shifting pendulum of issues.”

“For the most part we are a well-fed nation, but most of us are malnourished when it comes to knowing our food,” Lewis observed. She reported hope, however, in potentials for repositioning the agriculture beat to include the consumer beat.

Title: The dying art of talking crop
Posted at: http://www.rrj.ca/print/247/


Progress toward a high-speed always-on agricultural marketplace.

Conferees at InfoAg 2005 heard James Conner of Agristar Global Networks Ltd. describe the current state of the Internet, the adoption of broadband and the implications of this progress for agriculture and rural America.

Title: Broadband adoption and usage
Posted at: http://www.infoag.org/conferencebuilder/programdesigner/cb_showfile.asp?matid=280&file=mtrls_connerjames.pdf


Internet connections for the price of two old tin cans.

We have added to the ACDC collection a recent African Business article describing imaginative efforts to bring cheap Internet connections to rural Uganda. Professor Victor van Reijswoud of Uganda Martyrs University engaged the skills of a local blacksmith. The blacksmith connected tin cans and a small receiver to provide a point-to-point antenna with a 10 km range, all at a cost of less than $5.

“I am an appropriate technology expert,” van Reijswoud explained, “which means you make and repair tools within your own environment.”

Title: Internet connections for the price


Communicating the perils of eating trans fats.

A race is on to inform consumers about the new rule requiring companies to list the amount of trans fats on food labels.

The Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) rule became effective Jan. 1, 2006. The FDA says the fats increase the risk of heart disease. Trans fats often are found in snack and fried foods and baked goods.

Initial reaction to the rule has been mixed. The rule “allows people to identify what foods are most important to them, look at the cost to their health, then … decide what’s worth it and what’s not,” said a nutrition advisor. But a spokeswoman for Publix Super Markets in Florida said: “Even just reducing a product’s trans fat [content] might change its integrity. A cookie or a turnover still has to taste the way it’s meant to taste. That’s the obstacle.”

You can monitor related documents in the ACDC collection by using Subject search terms like “nutrition labeling” and “consumer information.”

Some sample documents:

“Questions and answers about trans fat nutrition labeling”
http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/qatrans2.html

“FDA to allow temporary exemptions to trans fat labeling”
http://www.foodnavigator-usa.com/news/ng.asp?id=64374

National Restaurant Association’s regulatory comments on trans fat labeling
http://www.restaurant.org/government/comments/hs2002_12_16transfat.cfm


Twelve new research reports about agricultural communications 

They were presented at a recent conference of the Southern Association of Agricultural Scientists (SAAS) in Orlando, Florida. Reports touched on teaching, listening, research and practice in communicating about a variety of agricultural topics. The titles:

  • “Environmental groups identify barriers to agriculture in adopting water quality BMPs [Best Management Practices].”
  • “A semiotic analysis of biotechnology and food safety photographs in TimeNewsweek and U.S. News & World Report.”
  • “Teaching students to write: a review of history, movements and methods.”
  • “Themes, authors and citations in the Journal of Applied Communications, 2000-2004.”
  • “Evaluating genetically modified food labels: a focus group study.”
  • “Podcasting agriculture news.”
  • “Understanding the U.S. public’s lack of knowledge about agricultural biotechnology and its implications for print media.”
  • “ ‘The stuff you need out here:’ a semiotic analysis of agricultural magazine advertisements.”
  • “Bridging borders: organizing short-term agricultural communication study abroad programs.”
  • “Cognitive and affective responses by Lubbock Chamber of Commerce affiliates to agricultural news.”
  • “Communication efforts of Florida extension agents during the 2004 hurricane season.”
  • “Local marketing and promotional efforts of Florida extension agents.”

You can view these papers online at: http://agnews.tamu.edu/saas/saasproceedings.html


Communicator activities approaching

March 23-25, 2006
Spring meeting of the Agricultural Relations Council in Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
Information: Jeri Mattix Omernik of Rocky Mountain Marketing Communications at: jmo@rmmc.biz

April 19-21, 2006
“Jazzed!” Agri-Marketing Conference and Trade Show sponsored by the National Agri-Marketing Association (NAMA) in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
Information: http://www.nama.org/amc

May 8-11, 2006
“NETC 2006.” National Extension Technology Conference at Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Information: http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/netc2006/

May 14-17, 2006
“International teamwork in agricultural and extension education.” Conference of the Association for International Agricultural Education and Extension (AIAEE) in Clearwater Beach, Florida, USA.
Information: http://www.aiaee.org/pdf/2006Announce.pdf

May 21-26, 2006
“Managing agricultural information for sustainable food security and improved livelihoods in Africa.” Conference of the International Association for Agricultural Information Professionals (IAALD) in Nairobi, Kenya.
Information: http://www.asareca.org/iaald-africa


Oh, those ornery gremlins.

We end this issue of ACDC News with several examples of gremlins we have seen at work recently in agricultural writing and editing.

(Headline): “[ ] calls for hearings to look into lacks enforcement of Packers & Stockyards Act.”

(Expressing appreciation): “The authors thank [ ] for supporting this study while maintaining responsibility for any errors.”

(From a candidate for leadership of a farm organization): “I am a teem player, trust me.”


Best regards and good searching.

When you see interesting items you cannot find locally or online, get in touch with us at docctr@library.uiuc.edu. Tell us the titles and/or document numbers. We will help you gain access.

Please pass along your reactions, suggestions and ideas for the Agricultural Communications Documentation Center. Feel free to invite our help as you search for information. And please suggest (or send) agricultural communications documents we might add to this unique collection. We welcome them in hard copy (sent to Ag Com Documentation Center, 510 LIAC, 1101 S. Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801) or electronic form at docctr@library.uiuc.edu

March, 2006